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Negotiating Credibility:
Britain and the International
Monetary Fund, 19561976
B E N C L I F T A N D J I M T O M L I N S O N
Abstract
For twenty years before the famous crisis of 1976 Britain was a regular borrower from the
International Monetary Fund (IMF). Through this lending role, the Fund in these years
played a key part in determining the credibility of British policies. Borrowing from the Fund
meant that British policy had to be seen as conforming to certain norms, but these norms were
always negotiable, albeit within shifting limits. This article uses archival material from London
and Washington to examine these processes of negotiation, showing how far British policy was
shaped by the desires of the IMF, and how far it was able to maintain autonomy in national
economic policy.
Along with other West European countries, Britain in the 1950s and 1960s pursued
ambitious domestic policy objectives, especially full employment and fast economic
growth, in an increasingly liberal international economic environment. Although
progress on this road was uneven, liberalisation of trade and capital flows increasingly
exposed all these national economies to the possibility of increased international
constraints on domestic policies.1 Conducting such policies in this environment
required that the authorities continually kept in mind the impact of domestic
decisions on international opinion, especially the opinion of those who played akey role in decision-making in the major international economic bodies. Until
the 1970s the most important of these bodies were the General Agreement on
Dr Ben Clift, Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Warwick, Coventry,
CV4 7AL; B.M.Clift@warwick.ac.uk. Professor Jim Tomlinson, School of Humanities, University
of Dundee, Dundee, DD14HN; j.d.tomlinson@dundee.ac.uk. The authors would like to thank the
Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland for financial support, and the ESRC-funded Centre for
the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation at the University of Warwick for funding Ben Clifts
teaching buy-out which enabled parts of this research to be pursued. We would also like to thank the
Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick for granting the study
leave and providing the financial support which enabled the fieldwork in Washington to be carried
out.1 S. Newton,The Global Economy 19442000: The Limits of Ideology (London: Arnold, 2004).
Contemporary European History,17, 4 (2008), pp. 545566 C 2008Cambridge University Press
doi:10.1017/S0960777308004700 Printed in the United Kingdom
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546 Contemporary European History
Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). On GATT
we may say that in broad terms this bodys agenda of trade liberalisation, which
Britain, of course, had helped to formulate, did not act as a major constraint on
Britains policies, which embodied a somewhat hesitant but persistent path to freer
trade.2
In the case of the IMF, its role was crucial in these years, because it was not only
the key international agency in regulating international financial policy, but also the
provider of large amounts of finance for national governments and thus, as the body
paying the piper, potentially able to call the tune. (Later, from the 1970s, the role of
the IMF was to diminish as private finance played a much larger role in international
finance.3 ) The IMFs role in the context of the development of the international
financial system has led to an enormous literature.4 Much less systematic attention has
been paid to the relationship between the IMF and particular national governments,
although some texts do deal with elements of this story.
5
We may helpfully thinkof this IMFnational government relationship as concerned with the issue of how
such governments could sustain credibility with the IMF, a credibility necessary if
loans were to be obtained. This issue of credibility is at the core of the discussion
of the crisis surrounding Britains much analysed borrowing from the IMF in
1976.
Despite the mythology to the contrary, the IMF visit and subsequent loan was not
the cause of the reversal of British economic policy seen in the mid -1970s. Rather,
policy had already shifted fundamentally towards deflation rather than maintaining
employment before IMF officials set foot in Britain.6 This does not mean that the IMF
was irrelevant to resolving the economic crisis of the time. The key role of the Fundwas to give its seal of approval to British policy in order to rebuild confidence. As Burk
and Cairncross put it, what financial markets . . . looked for was the acceptance by
the IMF that enough had been done. Nothing less would have restored confidence
in sterling.7 What was negotiated in 1976 was a stamp of approval that restored
the international credibility of British policy, ending the outflow of capital and
the downward pressure on the exchange rate. The Labour government restored
2 R. Toye, The Attlee Government, the Imperial Preference System and the Creation of the GATT,
English Historical Review, 118 (2003), 91239.3 R. Germain,The International Organization of Credit(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997).4 The best short summary is B. Eichengreen, Globalizing Capital: A History of the International Monetary
System (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996), ch. 4. Much more detailed are K. Horsefield,
The International Monetary Fund 194565: Twenty Years of International Monetary Co-operation(Washington,
DC: IMF, 1969); M. de Vries, The International Monetary Fund 19661971: The System under Stress, 2
vols (Washington, DC: IMF, 1976); M. de Vries,The International Monetary Fund, 197278: Co-operation
on Trial(Washington, DC: IMF, 1985); H. James,International Monetary Co-operation since Bretton Woods
(Washington, DC: IMF, 1996).5 R. Solomon, The International Monetary System, 19451976: An Insiders View (New York: Harper &
Row, 1977), ch. 5.6 S. Ludlam, The Gnomes of Washington: Four Myths of the 1976 IMF Crisis, Political Studies, Xl
(1992), 71327.7 K. Burk and A. Cairncross, Goodbye Great Britain: The 1976 IMF Crisis (New Haven: Yale University
Press), 225.
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Negotiating Credibility: Britain and the IMF, 19561976 547
credibility to its policy stance, exactly as a later generation of analysts would argue
was the essential prerequisite to pursuing an independent national policy. 8
But was the 1976 episode typical of the experience of the previous decades?
As Britain pursued its domestic goals in a world of growing international capital
mobility, combined with fixed exchange rates down to 1972, how far and underwhat conditions did the IMF act to provide the credibility which allowed national
governments space to pursue such policies?
The process of negotiating credibility was highly political, focusing not only
on specific policy measures but also on the major question of how far national
governments could and should accept limits on their sovereignty. In 1976 this question
was crucial to the domestic political dispute, polemicists claiming that acceptance of
the IMF package was a humiliation in which Britain had lost the capacity to determine
its own policies.9 But whilst this argument took dramatic form in the mid-1970s, it
was present, with varying degrees of prominence in BritishIMF relations over theprevious two decades. Alongside the issue of external financial credibility was the
need for any deal to have domestic political credibility.
Using archives in both London and Washington, this article places the credibility
issue in the context of Britains dealings with the IMF over the twenty years to 1976. In
that period the British government was discussing the state of the British economy
with the IMF for much of the time, either because of the frequent borrowings
(standby arrangements) or through routine discussions. Before 1976, borrowing had
taken place in 1956, 1961, 1962, 1967, 1969 and 19745, but such borrowings
had to be renewed annually, and were thus subject to further negotiation. 10 Parallel
consultative discussions took place under Article XIV and later Article VIII of theFund Agreements.
Britains dealings with the IMF in 1976 have been much discussed,11 and there
is also material on the 1967 devaluation and its aftermath.12 We also have scholarly
accounts of Britains broader relations with the IMF, especially the role of sterling.13
But we lack a long-term, analytic overview of Britains relationship with the IMF
over these two decades which draws together the experience of the whole period,
focusing attention on the credibility issue and the interwoven question of the capacity
8
E. Balls, Open Macroeconomics in an Open Economy,Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 45(1998),11332. B. Clift and J. Tomlinson, Credible Keynesianism? New Labour Macroeconomic Policy and
the Political Economy of Coarse Tuning,British Journal of Political Science, 37 (2007), 4769.9 K. Hickson,The IMF Crisis of 1976 and British Politics (London: Tauris, 2005), chs. 4, 5.
10 S. Gold,The Standby Arrangements of the IMF(Washington, DC: IMF,1970),210; de Vries,International
Monetary Fund 19661971, 3956.11 Burk and Cairncross, Goodbye; M. Harmon, The British Labour Government and the 1976 IMF Crisis
(London: Palgrave, 1997); Hickson, IMF Crisis; de Vries, International Monetary Fund 197278 ; M.
Crawford, High-Conditionality Lending: the UK Case, in J. Williamson, ed., IMF Conditionality
(Washington, DC: Institute for International Economics, 1985).12 De Vries, IMF 19661971, chs. 18, 21; Harmon, British Labour Government, 2945; S. Strange, ed.,
International Economic Relations of the Western World, Volume 2 International Monetary Relations (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1976), 13572.13 E.g. S. Strange,Sterling and British Policy(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1971); C. Schenk,Britain
and the Sterling Area(London: Routledge,1994); Strange,International Economic Relations.
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548 Contemporary European History
of national governments to determine their own policies, and it is to this analysis that
this article contributes.
I
At the Bretton Woods negotiations the attitudes of a debtor country such as Britain
and the worlds major creditor, the United States, were bound to differ, and the
difference was evident in the discussion of conditionality. Keynes, Britains key
negotiator at Bretton Woods, and the British wanted close to automatic access to the
Funds resources, the Americans substantial conditionality, in order to keep debtors
in check. The US viewpoint was not embodied in the original Agreements but
was introduced and developed through the 1950s, so that increasing emphasis on
conditionality reflected the dominance of the United States within the organisation.
In 1952 the standby arrangement became the standard form of IMF borrowing,
providing a borrowing facility with increasingly tough conditions attached as theamount borrowed increased.14
Britain borrowed unconditionally from the Fund in 1947 and 1948.15 Frequent
borrowing began from 1956, when conditionality was already being applied to
developing countries (the main borrowers in the period up to the late 1950s) but
not yet to developed countries. Thereafter, conditionality in general increased, and
over the next twenty years became more sophisticated and more substantial. This
was the environment within which successive British governments had to work.
Conditionality became markedly more exacting from the mid-1960s, the Labour
governments period in office being accompanied by a significant shift in relations
with the IMF. Standby arrangements between 1964 and 1969 saw a steady ramping
up of the specificity of undertakings, performance targets and strings attached to
borrowing on the part of an increasingly interventionist Fund. This is most clearly
demonstrated with the increased frequency and formalisation of review visits tied
to standby arrangements, as in 1967 and 1969. There was concern on the IMF side
of impartiality of treatment, given the (legitimate) grievance of other countries that
the United Kingdom was getting too easy a ride in comparative terms. In 1968
the IMF regularised its standby arrangement procedures so that, formally at least, all
borrowers receive equal treatment,16 but IMF officials clashed over how this should
affect IMFUK relations. A consensus emerged to seek uniformity in spirit if notuniformity in detail of form, effectively conceding less conditionality for the United
Kingdom, justified because to a considerable degree, through the periodic review, we
have in fact maintained a surveillance approaching that of other countries.17 There
was a further evolution in 1973, as the IMF tried to recast its role of stewardship of
the international monetary order. The Fund introduced a lighter-touch regime a
14 Gold,Standby.15 Horsefield,International Monetary Fund 194565, 4647.16 IMF Archives (hereafter IMF), Staff Memoranda (hereafter SM), 68/128.17 IMF, UK Country files, 1760, Box # 32, File # 5, David Finch to the Managing Director United
Kingdom Consultation under standby arrangement, 16 July 1968.
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Negotiating Credibility: Britain and the IMF, 19561976 549
more informal approach to its interim consultations with those countries whose
exchange rate policies have a major impact on the international monetary system. 18
This heralded a shift to informal mini-consultations for those routine interactions
not tied to a standby arrangement.19
UKIMF interactions were a repeated game in the two decades under scrutiny,both sides learning from past interactions. UK politicians and officials became very
familiar with IMF preferences and opinions in relation to particular policies. This
feedback loop makes it difficult to discern the precise degree of influence of the
Fund; we knew what policies would be acceptable to [the Fund]; and when framing
our policies we knew that we wished to make a drawing from the Fund. In these
circumstances the distinction is a little subtle between submitting our policies for the
Funds approval and choosing policies we knew the Fund would approve.20
The recurrent themes across the two decades was the balance of payments position,
followed in importance by public expenditure growth. From the mid1960
s the Fundwas increasingly anxious to introduce credit ceilings and some quantitative measure
or target for monetary aggregates. As regards Letters of Intent which accompanied
standby arrangements, from the mid 1960s onwards there was an increased emphasis
on inserting trigger clauses, more precise performance criteria and quantitative targets
to increase the specificity of government undertakings. In response, government
officials began to pre-empt and seek to avoid being tied down to such targets and
criteria. Towards the end of the period, when UK officials were preparing for an
IMF borrowing in late 1973, much attention was paid to the preoccupations of the
management and the partners, focusing on domestic credit expansion, taxation and
the sterling rate as obvious candidates. Policymakers considered the implicationsof accepting DCE (Domestic Credit Expansion) targets (the IMFs favoured credit
ceiling yardstick) and the arguments to be deployed if such proposals are made to us.
Treasury officials began both to list policies and measures already determined and
announced which would make a good showing in a Letter of Intent and to consider
what other measures and policies the IMF (or European partners as a condition of
their support in the IMF) might wish to press on us and what our reactions should
be.21
II
Even before the Suez adventure and its impact on the pound, the British government
was considering approaching the IMF for funds to facilitate the transition to
convertibility.22 But by August 1956 the situation was leading to urgent discussion
18 IMF: Statement by Managing Director on Procedures for Reviews of External policies, The National
Archives, Kew (hereafter TNA), T354/226; IMF Executive Board Minutes (hereafter EBM), 31 Oct
1973.19 Rawlinson to Littler, TNA, T354/226, 12 Sept. 1973. See also TNA, T354/226Mrs. Hedley-Miller
to Mitchell, Visit of the IMF Representatives 22 and 23 November 1973, 27 Nov. 1973.20 Note to D. Ricketts 8 May 1959, TNA, T236/5740.21 C.W. Fogarty to D Mitchell, 21 Dec 1973, TNA, T233/2950.22 IMF Drawings Against Decreases in Sterling Balances, TNA, T236/5737, 4 May 1956.
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550 Contemporary European History
of how to deal with the loss of confidence, and as the crisis intensified the need to
borrow became overwhelming, and in December1956a loan of US$561million and
further standby of $739million was negotiated. This arrangement was conditional on
Britain agreeing to withdraw its forces from Egypt, a condition on which the United
States insisted.23 Interestingly, the French had borrowed from the IMF in October,which made them less vulnerable to the financial pressure which followed over the
next couple of months.24
The British presented the problem as a short-term loss of confidence in the pound
rather than a fundamental difficulty.25 This interpretation was accepted by the IMF,
and support endorsed in the following terms: The UKs basic position was sound;
a willingness to adopt domestic restraints to deal with economic pressures had been
amply demonstrated; and it was only in its role as an international banker that it was
in difficulties. The fact that more than half the worlds trade is conducted in sterling
must be the key to the door of the vault containing the Funds reserves.
26
While therewas no economic-policy conditionality attached to the December1956arrangement
(as opposed to a requirement of withdrawal from Suez), it had been preceded by an
economic policy statement by the chancellor of the exchequer, Harold Macmillan,
announcing further restrictive domestic policies.27 While arousing much less publicity
than later occasions, this statement raised the question of how far Britain in asking
for this money had had to make promises to the IMF about the conduct of national
policy. Douglas Jay for the Labour Party asked what policy undertakings had been
given to the IMF in return for the loan, and was told by Macmillan that the loan was
not conditional, although the fund had noted his earlier statement in approving the
loan.28 In February 1957 the Conservative backbencher John Biggs-Davison againsuggested that policy was being shaped by IMF conditions.29 The official view was
that the loan had been given in supportof British policies.30 In the event, this issue
seems to have found little resonance beyond the Tory backbenches, and officials took
the view that the less ministers said the more likely was it that the issue would die
away.31
The IMF had kept a close eye on British developments after the 1956 deal,
and while generally supportive of British policy, doubts were expressed about the
British authorities target of a 300million surplus on current account as well as the
governments reasons for not reducing trade discrimination more rapidly.
32
When itcame to the United Kingdoms request for an extension of the 1956 deal, support
23 Kunz, Importance, 22531; Kunz,Economic Diplomacy, chs. 5, 6, 7.24 Kunz,Economic Diplomacy, 102, 11314.25 Foreign Office to Washington IMF Stand-by, TNA, T236/5737, 8 Nov. 1956.26 IMF, EBM56/59 10Dec. 1956, 5.27 Statement by Harold Macmillan, 561 H. C. Deb., 5s, cols. 10528, 4 Dec. 1956.28 561H. C. Deb., 5s, col. 327, 18 Dec. 1956.29 562H. C. Deb., 5s, col. 56, 16 Feb. 1957; ibid., 31 Jan. 1957.30 Washington to Foreign Office, TNA, T236/5738, 14 Dec 195631 Draft letter to Biggs-Davison, TNA, T236/5379 17 Feb. 1957; Conditions for Fund Drawings,
ibid., 18 Feb. 1957.32 Comments by L. Rasminsky, IMF, EBM 57/10, 27 Feb. 1957, 1315.
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Negotiating Credibility: Britain and the IMF, 19561976 551
was again forthcoming, although Executive Board members were keen to stress that
such renewal was not automatic, and that it should be given on the understanding
that Britain was continuing the policies in place at the time of the initial lending. 33
In 1958 the IMF Executive Board again commended the British policy of
restricting demand in order to reduce inflation and improve the payments andreserve positions, and expressed the hope that there would be no early relaxation.34
By December the board felt able to talk of a transformation in Britains economic
position, and welcomed the trade and exchange liberalisation that had followed.
Once again, renewal of the standby was seen as necessary because of the international
role of the pound.35
The 1950s saw considerable argument in British government circles about the
whole approach to economic management, especially on the control of inflation.
Part of this argument was about the relative powers of the treasury and the Bank of
England to determine monetary policy, and disagreements on this led to the creationof the Radcliffe Committee on the Working of the Monetary System in 1959.36 A
paper submitted to this committee argued that the idea of conditionality on loans
to Britain would be repugnant to the dignity of a country of the UKs status, and
went on to point out that the chancellor had made his policy statement before the
1956 loan was announced. But it continued, Nevertheless the Fund is presumably
entitled to say that it would not have consented to our drawing if it had not approved
of our policies.37 The issue was complicated by the fact that the Bank of England was
happier than the treasury to see borrowing from the IMF accompanied by a letter
of intent (which was not required in 1956). As a treasury official noted, I think that
I should say flatly that I consider that the Bank are here trying to make sure that theIMF influence will be bought to bear, with a powerful sanction, at future critical
junctures, and in particular at a time when HMG is more expansion-minded than
the Bank and the IMF.38 In other words, the treasury was keen to resist the Bank
using the IMF as a lever in domestic policy disagreements.
On the broad issue of the IMF and national autonomy in policymaking, the
Radcliffe Report carefully stated the British view in the following terms:
While the right to draw up to the first 25 per cent of a countrys quota is almost automatic,
countries have to justify by increasingly stricter criteria any drawings beyond this amount. The use
of the Funds resources does not allow a country the same freedom of action, therefore, as the useof its own reserves. In our view this should not deter the UK from relying upon the Fund and
assisting it to play a larger part in the international economy . . . The community of interests that
binds together the members of the Fund requires that members who wish to draw on the Fund
should be willing to justify to their fellow-members the economic and monetary policies which
33 IMF, EBM 57/59, 16 Dec. 1957, 214.34 IMF, EBM 58/11, 7 March 195835 IMF, EBM 58/59, 19 Dec. 1958, 316.36 P. Burnham, The Politicisation of Monetary Policy-Making in Post-War Britain, British Politics, 2
(2007), 395419.37 Note to D. Ricketts, TNA, T236/5740, 8 May 1959.38 Letter to A.W. France, TNA, T236/5740, ? June 1959.
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they are pursuing and that their fellow-members should refrain from imposing unduly rigorous
conditions on drawings.39
The careful balance suggested in the final sentence was sustainable for the time being,
but was to become less so as the 1960s wore on.1961 was the first year of consultations under Article VIII, and also saw a new
request by Britain for a standby arrangement as the expansionary phase of policy
accompanying the 1959 general election started to hit the payments position. In
support of the British case at the IMF it was argued that members should use the
Fund as a matter of ordinary business, drawing readily when in need and repurchasing
equally readily when the need has passed.40
The IMF willingly agreed what was the largest loan yet given by the Fund ($1,500
million of drawings, $500 million of standby). Some scepticism was expressed as
regards the short-termism of British policy, but the dominant feeling was once
again that the international role of the pound had to be defended and that domesticpolicy was facing up to the need to defend it one member of the Board commending
the presence in Piccadilly Circus of a neon sign proclaiming Either exports go up,
or Britain goes down.41 It was, however, pointed out that a key issue for the British
payments position was that overseas government expenditure had doubled in ten
years; that on aid had shown a similar increase in four years.
The impact on national policy of bargaining with the IMF was raised both by right-
wing Conservatives and by the Labour opposition in the Commons. Replying to
the former, Selwyn Lloyd, the chancellor of the exchequer, stated that no conditions
beyond the terms of repayment had been imposed, although he noted that thefacilities had been granted after his 25 July statement.42 In his question Harold Wilson
suggested that the Chancellor was able to get this very large loan only in return
for promising reactionary policies of a kind which would please certain international
bankers. Unsurprisingly, Lloyd denied this, asserting that There was no bargaining
about this at all. I made a statement about the policy of the Government, and after
the statement was made, the loan was granted.43
Beginning in1961the Conservative government began what some historians have
called the great reappraisal of British policy.44 Recent interpretations have stressed
the highly conjunctural underpinnings for this reappraisal, and also doubts about
39 Radcliffe Committee on the Working of the Monetary System, Report, Cmd 827, 1959, 247.40 IMF, EBM, 4 Aug. 1961.41 Ibid., 23.42 648H. C. Deb., 5s, cols. 7878, 7 Nov. 1961.43 649H. C. Deb., 5s, cols 1734, 14 Nov. 1961. For discussion of this episode see A. Booth, Inflation,
Expectations and the Political Economy of Conservative Britain, 19511964, Historical Journal, 43
(2000), 844.44 Samuel Brittan seems to have invented this term; see S. Brittan, The Treasury under the Tories
(Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1964), ch. 7. For recent discussions see H. Pemberton, Policy Learning
and British Governance in the 1960s (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2004), and G. OHara, From Dreams to
Disillusionment: Economic and Social Planning in the 1960s (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2007).
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Negotiating Credibility: Britain and the IMF, 19561976 553
its long-term significance.45 But in the current context what is important is the
overwhelmingly domestic origins of this reappraisal, with no evidence that the
IMF played a significant role. Brittans account barely mentions the IMF, and this
estimation of the Funds lack of importance in this episode is borne out by later
archival research.46
1962saw a second successive year marked by a standby request. As this request was
not forced on the government by an immediate crisis, there was time for a less anxious
discussion of the pros and cons. The specific issue was how far the Fund, in return
for renewal, would exert pressure on Britain with regard to public spending, which
in the early 1960s was growing fast as part of the Conservatives modernisation
policies.47 As early as March 1962Per Jacobsson, the Managing Director of the IMF,
had written to the chancellor thanking him for his statement on public spending,
and stressing how much he believed that it is very important to make a long-term
programme of restraint in this field and stick to it.
48
Officials regarded public spendingas the key issue in any likely negotiations with the IMF on funding, and were acutely
aware of the sensitivities involved.49 In the event, the application was made, with
the treasury taking the view that while the IMF might be expected to ask fairly
searching questions about the level of public expenditure, It is unlikely however
that they would push these enquiries to such a point as to make us regret having
asked for a standby. Given that confidence in the pound might be affected by the
negotiations over Britains application to join the European Economic Community
(EEC), the balance of advantage seemed to lie with requesting a renewal from the
IMF.50 In the event, the public spending position did not prove a bone of contention.
A further renewal was requested in1963. The domestic case this time was made interms of an expansionary policy which the government was trying to prevent from
turning inflationary by seeking an agreement on incomes policy, whilst addressing
long-term growth by the creation of the National Economic Development Council
(NEDC). The broad thrust of this stance was welcomed by the IMF Executive Board,
although doubts were expressed about the effectiveness of an incomes policy.51 The
claim was made that the request reflected not a weakness in the current-account
position but was made with regard to the international role of the pound and its
vulnerability.52 Britains representative at the IMF argued that the aim of the renewal
was to provide
45 J. Tomlinson, Inventing decline: The Falling Behind of the British Economy in the Postwar Period,
Economic History Review, 49 (1996), 73157; A. Ringe, N. Rollings and R. Middleton, Economic Policy
under the Conservative, 19511964 (London: HMSO, 2004), 3942.46 S. Brittan,Steering the Economy: The Role of the Treasury (Harmondsworth: Penguin,1971),233; Ringe
et al.,Economic Policy; N. Tiratsoo and J. Tomlinson,The Conservatives and Industrial Efficiency, 195164:
Thirteen Wasted Years? (London: Routledge, 1998), ch. 2.47 R. Middleton,Government versus the Market(Cheltenham: Elgar, 1996), 497509.48 Per Jacobsson to Selwyn Lloyd, TNA, T236/6723, 9 March 1962.49 D. Mitchell, Renewal of UK Stand-by, TNA, T236/6723 27, March 1962.50 IMF Standby, TNA, T236/6723, n.d but ?April 1962.51 IMF, EBM, 29 July 1963(afternoon meeting), 7.52 IMF, EBM, 29 July 1963(morning meeting), 34.
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554 Contemporary European History
an overt sign both of the readiness of the United Kingdom to draw upon the Fund and of the
Fund to give immediate assistance. This is in itself a deterrent to speculators and the existence of a
substantial standby makes it rather less than more likely that the UK would need to draw upon the
resources of the Fund.53
The1963Letter of Intent pledged the British government to keep the Fund informedof developments, especially on the exchange, trade, credit and fiscal situations and
to consult and, if necessary, reach new understandings if there was a major policy
shift.54 This had become the standard form for these letters, again reflecting previous
experience on negotiations with the IMF, and in1963seems not to have aroused any
comment.
The next request for a standby, in 1964, was complicated by the prospect of a
general election. The IMF response to the draft Letter of Intent in May 1964 was
that it did not put enough emphasis on holding down the inflationary pressures, and
criticised the implication that 23 per cent inflation was all right.55 The Treasury
feared that this concern with inflation would translate into criticism of the British
budget deficit, so the application for a standby focused attention on why the deficit
in current circumstances was not inflationary, both because most of the budget deficit
would be financed outside the banking sector and because, it was argued, inflation
was driven by the conditions of real demand and not monetary expansion.56
The normal consultations that summer focused on the impact on inflation and the
payments position of continuing rises in demand, although without emphasis on the
monetary position.57 However, discussion at the Executive Board once the standby
request had been made did focus some attention on monetary issues, although this
was but one among a number of topics discussed.58 The standby was granted with nodifficulties.
III
The election of a Labour government in 1964inaugurated a more turbulent period
in Britains international economic relations, including with the IMF, and led, among
other stratagems, to a temporary tactic of keeping of two sets of data on key economic
statistics with the intention of misleading the Fund.
The immediate aftermath of Labours election victory in October1964 was marked
by a foreign-exchange crisis, quickly followed by the imposition of import charges.Although these charges caused significant international repercussions the IMF was
not directly concerned, as the charges were non-discriminatory and had no direct
relation to the IMFs concern with financial issues.59 One member of the Executive
Board (Mr Larre) noted how the British account of their current position was at
53 Report of IMF Executives discussion of31 July, TNA, T277/1233, 8 Aug. 1963.54 IMF, EBM, 29 July 2007(morning meeting), 6.55 Mins of meeting 7 May 1964re draft Statement of Intent, TNA, T311/276.56 IMF Standby: notes for Sir Eric Roll, TNA, T311/277, 7 July 1964; IMF, EBM, 27 July 1964, 6.57 IMF: UK Consultations 1964Final Statement by Friedman 12 May 1964, TNA, T277/1440.58 IMF, EBM, 27 July 1964, 11, 19, 25.59 IMF, EBM, 28 Oct 1964, 234.
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556 Contemporary European History
two sets of books.67 UK officials elected to come clean (with figures) about the
balance of payments by taking the IMF Mission orally through the prospects for
1966 and difficulties of discerning them now in a more or less numberless fashion,
but not concealing the possibility of some residual deficit next year.68
Whilst the May 1965 Letter of Intent hinted that external balance would beachieved in 1966 without the import surcharge, the December IMF mission noted
that it was now clear that the import surcharge would have to remain, and even
then balance would not be achieved. Whittome, the director of the IMF European
Department, argued that demand was too high and unemployment too low. The
Fund, however, recognised that it was entirely up to HMG how the commitment
was honoured.69
The strategy of massaging the figures presented to the IMF created as many
problems as it resolved, and it was abandoned in November1965.70 During1966UK
government officials sought rather unconvincingly to recast their earlier undertakings,conceding that whilst the original target as rigorously defined would not be
precisely achieved, it was less important to get balance in any particular short
period than to achieve the trend of improvement we need to bring us into surplus.71
This line was agreed upon by UK officials, so as to avoid deceiving the Fund. 72
The May 1966 consultations focused on how the balance of payments will be
restored to equilibrium in the second half of 1966 and how, thereafter, sufficient
surpluses will be accumulated.73 The IMF mission advocated bringing public
expenditure under firmer control.74 UK policy elites were wary of precise targets
for this expenditure because the written forecast given last year has proved an
embarrassment, and our view is that we might avoid some future embarrassmentif we do not give the Fund a formal written memorandum embodying quantified
forecasts now.75 Balance-of-payments forecasts handed to the IMF team during the
consultations were, it was underlined, not to be treated as a formal UK forecast but
as help to the Fund staff in preparing their report on their own responsibility. 76
IMF disquiet at the inadequacy of measures to restrict internal demand remained a
significant element in UKIMF interactions until the balance-of-payments situation
improved at the very end of the decade. UK officials countered this with attempts
to insert flexibility into undertakings, interpretations and forecasts, but this became
more difficult as the nature of undertakings accompanying borrowing increased inscale, specificity and scope in the late 1960s.
67 Ibid.68 Workman memo to Hubback IMF Visit: Balance of payments, TNA, T230/800, 26 Nov. 196569 Note for the Record on IMF consultations by D. Hubback, TNA, T230/800, 7 Dec. 1965.70 P. Brown to Workman The IMF Visit in December, TNA, T230/800, 25 Nov. 1965.71 Mr. Workman IMF Consultations: Balance of Payments, TNA, T230/801, 4 May 1966.72 Ibid.73 United Kingdom 1966Article VIII Consultations: Preliminary List of Questions, TNA, T230/720.74 IMF: United Kingdom Consultations 1966, TNA, T312/1632, 27 April 1966.75 Mr. Workman IMF Consultations: Balance of Payments, TNA, T230/801, 4 May 1966.76 Quotes from Balance of payments line in Article 8 consultations, TNA, T230/720.
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This tightening of conditionality was a conspicuous feature of the United
Kingdoms hotly disputed November1967 standby arrangement. Early drafts of the
UK governments Letter of Intent to the IMF proposed demand-restraining fiscal
policy targets as quantified trigger clauses.77 These were staunchly opposed by the
UK chancellor. On monetary policy the chancellor stuck to his no quantification ofany sort. Indeed, William Armstrong of the UK treasury even threatened that if the
Fund insisted on ceilings, the UK might have to do without a standby arrangement. 78
Tense argument and counter-argument continued at the highest level between the
treasury and the IMF. The Fund sought unsuccessfully to secure specific quantitative
commitments to reduced government borrowing for1968, to the diversion of 300
million of resources into tackling the balance of payments, to tax increases and to
45million in spending cuts.79
Schweitzer reminded the chancellor that such quantitative targets were standard
IMF procedure in the high credit tranches, adding,
I am concerned that unless thiscentral point is met we would all be courting a new crisis before too long for sterling
and the world monetary system as a whole.80 The next day, the chancellor told
Schweitzer that he could not give the IMF information which appears to go beyond
what we are able to give to the House. You will understand how extremely damaging
an accusation of secret undertakings in relation to an IMF standby could be.81
The Letter of Intent of November 1967 said that measures should be taken as
and when required to secure the proposed improvement of at least 500 million
a year in the balance of payments. More specifically, it noted that the deflationary
government measures announced on 18November would lead to the reduction of
home demand by 750million to 800million below what would otherwise havebeen the case.82 This forecast was not a hard target. The Letter contains few specific
quantitative targets for fiscal policy. The United Kingdom also avoided a phasing of
the drawing, reducing the degree to which the UK government was beholden to the
IMF in the months following, although the Letter of Intent did involve commitments
to reviews in February, July and November1968.
The borrowing requirement for the financial year beginning April 1968 would
be kept under firm control, meaning not more than 1 billion. There was an
expectation, although not a commitment, that the growth in the money supply
would be less for1968
than it had been for1967
as a result of measures limiting bankcredit which had already been taken.83
77 Earlier drafts of Letter of Intent apparently by WA (William Armstrong), TNA, T326/730, no date.78 Frank Southard Memo for files Proposed UK Stand-By Arrangement: Conversation with Mr Goode,
IMF, Country Files: United Kingdom, File 1760, box 32, 22 Nov. 1967.79 Frank Southard Memo for files Proposed UK Stand-By: Conversations with Mr Goode, November
21and 22 1967, ibid., 22 Nov. 1967.80 Personal message from Schweitzer to the Chancellor, TNA, PREM 13/3151, 22 Nov. 1967.81 Personal message from Chancellor to Schweitzer, ibid., 23 Nov. 1967.82 United Kingdom Stand-By Arrangement, EBS/67/277, 29 Nov. 1967, 1.83 Ibid., 2.
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At the November Executive Board some IMF Executive Board members from
developing countries called for more precise targets, and questioned whether the
proposed measures went far enough. The UK Executive Board director highlighted
the seal of approval significance of the standby arrangement at the meeting, noting
that while the actual facility to draw if necessary is of great importance, it is no moreso than the indication that it gives to the world at large that UK policies have the
approval and confidence of the Fund.84
Once again questions were asked about the strings attached to the IMF loan. The
government line was that policy conditions had not been imposed.85 Rather, in so
far as the governments freedom to act is restricted, these restrictions are imposed
by the facts of the situation and not by the IMF.86 Wilson put the commitments
in comparative context: we are living in an age when every country comes under
scrutiny. Maudling had to send a Letter of Intent in 1964, and so no doubt did Selwyn
Lloyd three years earlier.
87
Despite public spending cuts in January1968, the February IMF mission remained
sceptical about British policy, notably in relation to firm control of the borrowing
requirement.88 Of this suspicion, treasury officials noted that Fund staff believe
that . . . our policies have often been shown by events to be insufficient. This strongly-
held belief is doctrinal with a certain amount of emotion attached . . . the present
scepticism will continue until our own performance proves us right or wrong.89 The
IMF recommended final expenditure reductions in the order of 500 million in
1968/69to put the balance of payments on an unquestionably sound footing and to
convince opinion inside and outside the country that this has been done. 90 By late
July1968, UK officials were expressing disquiet at the strictures of the money supplyundertakings given to the IMF, and their adverse unemployment effects (the latter
having increased unexpectedly).91
Meanwhile top Fund officials, disappointed at the UK governments response
to the February 1968 review, considered invoking paragraph 16 of the Letter of
Intent. A decision was taken against setting in motion procedures for a new formal
consultation between the UK and the Fund, because (a) the Governments political
position would be further weakened; and (b) confidence in sterling would be adversely
affected.92 By the end of 1968 the IMF acknowledged that the government had
84 EBM/67/97, 1821.85 PMs personal minute to the Chancellor on the adjournment debate on the IMF loan, TNA, PREM
13/3151, 4 Dec. 1967.86 Brief for Ministers by P.R. Baldwin, What strings or conditions have been attached to the credits
from foreign Central Banks and the IMF standby?, ibid.,1Dec. 1967.87 PMs personal minute to the Chancellor on the adjournment debate on the IMF loan, ibid., 4 Dec.
1967.88 EBS/68/86, 26 March 1968.89 Hubback to Goldman, UK Forecasts and the Fund/OECD February Consultations, TNA,
T312/2119, 25 Jan. 1968.90 Statement by Richard Goode IMF Consultations: Final Session, TNA, T312/2120, 27 Feb. 1968.91 Andrew Graham to Mr Halls on Commitments to the IMF,TNA, PREM 13/3151, 26 July 1968.92 Memorandum from Richard Goode to the Managing Director, United Kingdom Consultations
under the standby arrangement, IMF, CF, UK Country files,1760, Box # 32, File # 5, 10 July 1968.
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acted vigorously in the fiscal area to restrain demand; public expenditure seems
to have been well controlled and Heavy tax increases were included in the March
budget.93 The school report for 1968 still bemoaned must try harder, calling for
continued restraint on demand and on liquidity deemed essential to achieve the
further improvement in the balance of payments which is needed.94
In June 1969 the IMF agreed a further standby arrangement, but with a further
heightening of the degree of conditionality compared with the November 1967
drawing. The Letter of Intent contained two items expressed in quantitative terms:
first, an objective of a 300 million balance of payments surplus for current
financial year; second, domestic credit expansion is intended to be limited to
not more than 400 million in 1969/1970.95 A memorandum of understanding
was agreed between the IMF mission and UK representatives including quarterly
domestic credit expansion targets, which were communicated to the Executive
Board but, at the Chancellors request, not published.
96
Meanwhile, throughoutthe standby arrangement negotiation process, considerable press coverage raised the
domestic credibility issue of the degree to which the Fund would constrain the UK
government.97 There were also questions to the chancellor on this topic in the House
of Commons.98
The relationship between the 1960s Labour government and the IMF was tense
and difficult for much of the time, as the above discussion has emphasised. But if we
ask the key question of how far British domestic policy in these years was seriously
shifted by the need to sustain credibility with the IMF, the overall conclusion would be
that this did not happen. Many of the differences outlined above came down to either
the mechanisms or presentation of policy, not its underlying trajectory. Above all, therecognition that devaluation would have to be accompanied by sharply deflationary
policies was not the consequence of IMF pressure, but had been recognised by senior
ministers and officials as a reason for trying to avoiddevaluation in the 19647 period.99
IV
The UK balance-of-payments surplus from late 1969 onwards, coupled with the
desire to be freed from intensive IMF scrutiny, led to a happy interlude. During this
time Britain repurchased all its previous purchases from the Fund. The last repurchase
was completed on 28 April 1972. On 23 June 1972, the Funds holdings of sterling
93 United Kingdom Review under standby arrangement, EBS/68/342, 30 Dec. 1968, 20.94 Ibid., 21.95 IMF UK Standby. Statement by the Chancellor of the Exchequer in the House of Commons after
questions on 23 June 1969, TNA, PREM 13/3151.96 Memorandum of Understanding, TNA, PREM 133151, 22 May 1969; Memorandum of
Understanding, IMF, Country Files: United Kingdom, # 1760, Box 32, 3 May 1969.97 Victoria Brittain, Toughest-Yet Rules on New IMF Stand-by, The Times, 11 May 1969; Samuel
Brittan, IMF to Pose Stiff Conditions for UK Standby Credit, Financial Times, 12 May 1969.98 783 H.C. Deb. 5s, cols. 14036, 14 May 1969; International Monetary Fund (Stand-By Credit),
TNA, T326/979.99 J. Tomlinson, The Labour Governments 19641970, Vol. 3 Economic Policy (Manchester: Manchester
University Press, 2004) ch. 3, especially 567.
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560 Contemporary European History
stood at 75 per cent of quota.100 But then the situation changed rapidly, and the
pound was floated. This hinted at credibility and confidence problems for the UK
government and its relation to international capital markets. However, these were
not deemed to be of a lasting or serious nature at this point, and the IMF Mission
report recorded that in announcing the decision to float, the Chancellor noted thatthere was nothing in the objective facts of our balance of payments position or the
level of our reserves to justify these [short-term capital] movements.101
The floating of sterling added to the sense of an international monetary system
in flux. The IMF in this period was seeking to find and define a new role for
itself in a radically changed international context, heralded in 1971 by the floating
dollar. Fractious discussion of reform of the organisation continued throughout
the early 1970s and was not resolved until the new articles of agreement in
1978. The sense of international uncertainty and instability was compounded in
1973 by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) crisisand the attendant balance-of-payments deficits for many industrial countries.102
IMF Managing Director Johan Witteveen developed the oil facility, which saw
the IMF operate more like a bank, lending at something approaching market
rates and with virtually no conditionality.103 The rationale behind such largely
unconditional assistance was to help countries facing balance-of-payments problems
arising specifically from the oil crisis. Overall, and to the extent that the distinction
could be drawn, the IMF took a more permissive view of balance-of-payments
deficits arising from the oil crisis compared with normal payments imbalances.
In Britain the planning process for another drawing from the IMF began in late
1973under the Conservative government and continued for two years, finally comingto fruition (under a different government) in December1975. The broad strategy of
the Labour government elected in February 1974, in the face of the OPEC crisis
imbalances in19745, was to attempt to tunnel through to economic recovery using
borrowing (not just from the IMF, but from OPEC governments, and where possible
Eurocurrency markets). This came in the context of the changed emphasis in the
international political economy that encouraged borrowing over adjustment as well as
the inflow of OPEC current account surpluses.104 The April1975budget showed that
the government had become convinced of the need to alter policy and cut spending
commitments to reduce the scale of necessary borrowing. At the same time, thetask of preparing a possible Letter of Intent was once again occupying UK officials.
Continued emphasis was placed on less rigidity, avoidance of quantitative targets and
summaries of existing government as undertakings. This planned drawing, from the
first credit tranche and the oil facility, would involve much lower conditionality than
the higher credit tranche borrowings of the late 1960s.105
100 United Kingdom Staff Report for the 1972Article VIII consultation, IMF, SM/72/155, 27.101 Ibid., 25.102 James,International Monetary Co-operation, ch. 10, 2515.103 De Vries,International Monetary Fund 197278, 322; Harmon,British Labour Government, 659.104 Harmon,British Labour Government, 99.105 J. M. Bridgeman to Lavelle, Littler, IMF Letter of Intent,TNA, T233/2950, 12 May 1975.
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In August 1975 the chancellor explained to Witteveen that he had inherited a
seriously unbalanced economy. He had decided not to allow the oil crisis to provoke
deflation, but had decided to finance the balance of payments deficit.106 However,
with the failure of the social contract to contain wage pressures, and rising inflation,
financing was becoming more difficult, with the commercial market unfavourable.The result was likely to be a financing gap in the coming months of around 600
million, or say $1.3 billion, for which the IMF would be a natural source. In
particular, the chancellor was keen not to miss the boat of the oil facility with its very
limited conditionality. As further evidence of the complex role played by the IMF in
securing domestic credibility, in UK government negotiations to secure spending and
wage moderation officials noted that recourse to the IMF presented some domestic
political problems, not least because in discussion of incomes policy and public
expenditure, the Chancellor had made some use of the IMF as a threat. 107
The prime minister and senior cabinet colleagues discussed a possible IMF drawingin late October 1975. The chancellor, Denis Healey, warned of a likely serious
deterioration in the economy in 1977, the only solution being reflation, which
would not be possible until it was clear to world opinion that the Governments
counter-inflation policy was going to be effective.108 This again demonstrates the
importance of credibility as the cornerstone of government economic strategy, and
the centrality of macroeconomic stability to securing it. At this time the importance
of credibility was heightened, given the UK governments external borrowing needs.
The chancellor considered borrowing from the Euro-currency markets, but noted
that it was most unlikely that this would be possible before the counter-inflation
policy was seen to be successful and the consequences of a rebuff were too serious tomake this approach a reasonable risk. As a result, the IMF was the preferred option.
The chancellor pledged to allow no obligation to undertake any change to present
Government policies, and no conditions which would pre-empt future options for
direct action on the balance of payments should we wish to take it in seeking the
drawings from the oil facility.109
In response to IMF concerns about the public-sector borrowing requirement
(PSBR, the gap between government spending and taxation), the treasury noted that
we are facing more difficulty than oil facility and first credit tranche drawings
warrant. The reason for such difficulties illustrated another dimension of theimportance of credibility, in this instance relating to concerns about government
control of public expenditure. London identified a mood of scepticism amongst
IMF staff about our control of PSBR and public expenditure: the Budget forecast
of 9 billion PSBR shocked Witteveen; we had to give 101/2billion during talks in
August; they do not yet know it but [I] suspect that they are going to be given 12
billion now, and against this history want clear statements. In this context IMF staff
106 Rawlinson Possible IMF Drawing: Meeting with Witteveen, TNA, T371/23 31, Aug. 1975.107 Ibid.108 Note of a Meeting at 10 Downing St, TNA, PREM 16/348 28, Oct. 1975.109 Ibid.
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562 Contemporary European History
were particularly anxious not to be conned into a political commitment before they
know what the illustrative facts will be.110
The four areas of contention at this stage of the preparations for a drawing were,
first, the exchange rate, with opinions diverging on both sides about the relative
merits of slow or quick depreciation. Second were trade restrictions, to which theIMF was staunchly opposed. The third bone of contention was monetary policy and
domestic credit expansion. The fourth was public expenditure and PSBR, given the
rise in this noted above.
Some thought was given to pulling out of the planned IMF drawing given the
possibility of excessive conditionality, but this view was tempered by the recognition
that the United Kingdom only had to demonstrate policy adequate to achieve
medium-term balance-of-payments recovery. This constrained the demands IMF
staff could reasonably make; at least until the end of 1976, with unemployment
prospectively rising to 11
/2 million, the Staff cannot argue the need for additionaltransfer of resources into the balance of payments through the reduction of public
expenditure and increase in unemployment.111
Discussions with the IMF centred on public expenditure and the rising PSBR.
Healey stressed the importance of for cash limits on public expenditure, and these,
the chancellor told Witteveen, (in terms which were to reappear on the Letter of
Application) would do much to improve the control of expenditure . . . they would
apply to 65 per cent of vote expenditure, including that for local authorities.112
Illustrating the interaction of the two elements of the credibility issue noted
above, Witteveen insisted that cuts in public expenditure which would produce
substantial reductions in the PSBR over the next few years would be necessary torestore confidence in the UK in the international capital markets.113 In terms of UK
government credibility, damage had been caused by the necessity for dramatic upwards
revision of some very public targets during 1975, lending weight to perceptions of
spending not being under firm control. Mitchell recorded some embarrassment
at the discrepancy between the figure of 1.5% increase in public expenditure in
1975/76, and the later revision to 4.4%, not least because these figures were used
publicly by the chancellor in the Commons on 21 July 1975, and privately with
Witteveen on August 31.114 However, UK officials felt that they had convinced the
IMF that this was water over the dam and thus credibility with the Fund, at least,had been restored.115
The upshot of discussion with the IMF was that these facilities would be granted
without the need for a change in Government policy . . . Nor would there be any
restriction on the Governments policies relating to reflation and the sterling exchange
110 Littler, IMF Drawing, ibid., 29 Oct. 1975.111 Ibid.112 Note of a working dinner between Chancellor and Witteveen at No 11 Downing Street 3 Nov.
1975, TNA, T371/23.113 Ibid.114 Henley to Mitchell External use of public expenditure figures, ibid., 4 Nov. 1975.115 Miss J. E. Court to Mr Anson Fund Drawing: public expenditure, ibid., 12 Nov. 1975.
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Negotiating Credibility: Britain and the IMF, 19561976 563
rate.116 Quantitative targets for public expenditure cuts and the PSBR was the
crux. A figure of 3.5 billion in cuts (which mostly reflected decisions already
taken) was discussed and agreed. Witteveen considered inclusion of the figure for
public expenditure cuts to be a breaking point for his recommending [the UK]
application.117 Whittome pressed for the Letter of Application to say somethingquantitative, even if only in percentage terms, but Healey resisted, saying that the
public expenditure cuts were not themselves directly relevant to the first credit
tranche, and he did not want to create a precedent. Instead, he would be ready to
tell Dr Witteveen and leave him free to tell the Executive Board if that seemed to
him desirable.118
In late November 1975, Andrew Graham, a treasury adviser, expressed strident
opposition to some of the contents of the mooted IMF Letter of Application, in
particular the proposed commitment not to exceed an absolute figure (of 12
billon) for PSBR for1976
/77
;This must be resisted because (a) it would tie the Governments hands almost completely (and
wholly unreasonably) on reflation, and (b) a new forecasting round is just starting and this might
show a PSBR above 12bn in 1976/77. If it did, we would have to deflate in the next budget.
He also resisted phased payment, which could be conditional in a variety of
ways and the purse strings could even be tightened as we go along; he concluded,
exasperated, it is crazy to allow this letter of application to become one of intent.
How low have we sunk?119
In December1975the UK government applied for a drawing of special drawing
rights (SDRs, the reserve asset created by the IMF) of 1,000 million under theoil facility, and a standby arrangement for a further SDR 700 million (1 SDR =
approximately $1.2). The letter of application, which combined the oil facility and
first credit tranche applications, said explicitly that it merely summarised existing
policy commitments of the government set forth by the chancellor and the prime
minister. It had, one official noted, been deliberately loosely drafted as an exposition
of present policies and the way we see things going, and not as a set of undertakings in
any respect.120 As per earlier drafts, the Letter of Application identifies the government
objectives of a reduction in the rate of unemployment and a marked improvement
in the balance of payments position, as well as explicit mention of full employment
as an objective.121
The control of public expenditure, and the governments extensive use of
cash limits in 197677 . . . [on] about three quarters of central government voted
expenditure was set out in the letter. Although precise quantitative figures are absent,
116 Note of a Meeting in the House of Commons 5 Nov. 1975, TNA, PREM 16/348.117 NLW(?) to Prime Minister, TNA, PREM16/827, 19 Dec. 1975.118 C.W. France, Mr. Witteveens call on the Chancellor, TNA, T371/23, 20 Nov. 1975.119 A. Graham to Mr Stowe Letter to the IMF, TNA, PREM 16/348, 21 Nov. 1975 (emphasis in
original).120 NLW (?) to Prime Minister18 Dec. 1975, TNA, PREM 16/827.121 Healey to Witteveen Letter of Application, ibid., 18 Dec. 1975.
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the Letter noted that substantial reductions must be made in the public expenditure
programmes . . . Total public expenditure at constant prices (excluding debt interest)
will now be planned to remain, in 197778 and 197879, no higher than the level
now planned in 197677.122 Treasury memos hinted that someof the agreed figure
of 3.5billion did represent new cuts, referring to
a risk of embarrassment if the figure of 3.5 billion were to leak through the Executive Board,
and subsequently were to be compared with the savings shown in the White Paper by comparison
with CMND 5879. In particular, the 500 million saving on social security cannot be publicly
revealed.123
Overall, however, the Letter avoids tight constraints in relation to both public
expenditure and the borrowing requirement. Caveats were inserted to alleviate
earlier anxiety about PSBR targets.124 On the monetary policy front, whilst there
was reference to domestic credit expansion, Healey pointed out to Wilson that I was
able to insist that, for a letter applying only for the first credit tranche, greater detailand firmer undertakings were not required.125 The IMF Executive Board meeting
which discussed the UK drawing supported it, and praised UK policy.126
Concerns about the creditworthiness of the UK government hampered the
attempted strategy of tunnelling through the oil crisis difficulties. The principal
problems facing credibility were two fold, relating to inflation on the one hand
and public spending and the borrowing requirement on the other. The 1975 public
statement of the counter-inflation strategy,The Attack on Inflation(Cmnd. 6151, July
1975), was the governments attempt to address the first issue. The negotiations with
the IMF constituted one forum where the second credibility problem was addressed.
This was hampered by damaging revelations of underestimated deficits. By the end of
the process the UK policymakers felt that they had convinced the IMF of UK control
of public expenditure, and they also expected that the agreement on the drawing
would provide the seal of approval on UK policy necessary to convince international
capital markets of the stability and sustainability of the UK policy regime. This award
of a seal of approval was, as has been noted, to become the key outcome of the story
of1976.
V
Between 1956 and 1976 Britain pursued a policy of fine-tuning of the national
economy while simultaneously liberalising its international transactions. Given the
aim of sustaining sterling as an international currency while committing large amounts
of foreign exchange to overseas investment, military expenditure and development
aid, the payments position in this era was always falling below the hopes and ambitions
of policymakers, causing crises of confidence and entailing recourse to international
122 Ibid.123 Telegram Littler to France & Callaghan, IMF Drawing, TNA, PREM 16/827, 16 Dec. 1975.124 Healey to Witteveen Letter of Application, TNA, PREM 16/827, 18 Dec. 1975.125 Healey to Wilson, IMF Applications, ibid., 2 Jan. 1976.126 Telegram UK Director IMF Ryrie IMF Drawing, ibid., 31 Dec. 1975.
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support. In the immediate aftermath of the war this assistance came from the US
loan and Marshall Aid, but in the period thereafter the IMF was the key agency of
support. To obtain that support required negotiating credible policy positions with
the Fund while simultaneously maintaining domestic political credibility by asserting
the sovereignty of the national government over economic policy.Until 1965 sustaining these two credibilities was not very difficult. The role
of sterling gave Britain substantial bargaining power; the IMF, as guardian of the
international monetary system, could not permit the collapse of the worlds second
most important currency. At the same time, the Funds own overall stance was one of
low conditionality, and such conditionality as was imposed was negotiated bilaterally,
with little uniformity of treatment. In turn this meant that the British government
had little difficulty sustaining domestic political credibility; the grumbling of a few
backbenchers and opposition MPs was the worst governments had to face. Any idea
that British governments in this period were forced into significant policy concessionsin return for IMF help would be unsustainable.
After1965the position shifted. The IMF tightened up its policies on conditionality
and at the same time became less willing to treat Britain as exceptional. The desire to
support Britains defence of sterling remained, but the willingness to allow defence
of that role to be used as a reason for going easy on the British diminished. Also, the
mid-1960s saw some weakening of Britains overall balance-of-payments position,
although again it is worth emphasising how much the problem was over-ambitious
policy goals coupled with the vulnerability flowing from the reserve role of sterling,
rather than any major deterioration in international competitiveness.
Another element in the tensions of the 1960s was the advent of a Labourgovernment, always more subject to pressure to demonstrate the responsibility
of their financial policies, while simultaneously subject to greater pressure than
Conservative governments to pursue domestic policies likely to be at odds with
international financial opinion. Linked to this was a degree of ideological divergence
between the British government and the IMF over economic policy. A form of
monetarism was emerging in the counsels of the IMF, which involved not only
a focus on monetary aggregates, but, perhaps even more importantly, a scepticism
about governmental discretion in the conduct of economic policy and an enthusiasm
for fixed, quantitative targets. Nevertheless, as argued above, these pressures from theIMF cannot plausibly be said to have fundamentally shaped British domestic policy in
the late1960s. Above all, the post-devaluation debate was mainly about how deflation
should be achieved, rather than whether it was the right policy.
There are clear continuities in the debates of the late 1960s and those of the mid-
1970s. In both periods the uncertainty of the macro-economic environment made
predicting outcomes almost impossible, and made the British government extremely
wary of tying itself to the numerical targets that the IMF had come to favour. This
issue of national discretion in policy formulation was significant, but must not be
conflated with contention over policy objectives.
The problem of 1976, to reiterate, was not that the IMF as forcing a new anduncongenial policy direction on the Labour government. By the time of the IMF visit,
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policy was clearly giving priority to reducing inflation, which was on a downward
path, and public-sector finances were rapidly improving following the fiscal packages
of 1975 and 1976, and the imposition of cash limits on public spending. But the
government had to restore international confidence, and the support of the IMF was
vital for this. Juggling this necessity against the domestic political hostility arousedby dis-inflationary policies was the core issue in 1976. But despite the dramas of that
year, what occurred in 1976 does not in essence detract from the conclusion that,
while credibility was a vital goal of the authorities from the time of the Suez crisis
to the Callaghan period, its achievement did not push British policy on to paths
which would otherwise have been untrodden. Cairncross and Burks conclusion on
1976, that Apart from the continued issue of monetary targets, which were rarely
hit, economic policy in the last years of the Labour government differed little from
what it had been before the arrival of the IMF, could be applied to all previous
episodes of borrowing. In these years, the price of IMF credibility was small.
127
The question which this conclusion about the British case raises is how generally
it might apply. France would appear to be a particularly interesting comparator, as it
was also a big borrower from the IMF in these years, but was without the burden or
benefits of a reserve currency. In the British case, the IMF desire to sustain sterlings
international role proved a powerful bargaining chip in the battle to sustain domestic
control over policy. In the French case, did the absence of this chip seriously weaken
sustaining such control?
127 Burk and Cairncross, Goodbye Great Britain, 228.